Jacobson radical of the ring of lower triangular

Ansley Sparks

Ansley Sparks

Answered question

2022-04-13

Jacobson radical of the ring of lower triangular n×n matrices over Z

Answer & Explanation

unduncjineei5r3

unduncjineei5r3

Beginner2022-04-14Added 19 answers

Step 1
Fix a positive integer n.
Let R be the ring of lower triangular n×n matrices over Z, and let J be the Jacobson radical of R.
Let S be the set of elements of R which are strictly lower triangular.
It's easily verified that S is an ideal of R.
Claim: J=S
Proof:
Let AS
Since A is strictly lower triangular, it follows that A is nilpotent, hence InA is a unit of R.
Since S is an ideal such that InA is a unit of R for all AS, it follows that SJ (Beacher proves this in the text).
Next suppose SJ (proper inclusion).
Our goal is to derive a contradiction.
Let AJS.
Since AJ, it follows that InA is a unit of R, hence each diagonal element of InA is equal to either 1 or -1. But they can't all be equal to 1, else AS, hence at least one diagonal element of InA is equal to -1, so the corresponding diagonal element of A is equal to 2.
But AJ implies AJ, so In+A must be a unit of R, contradiction, since In+A has a diagonal element equal to 3.

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